Brahma-vidyā through Yoga: Restraint, Pranava Japa, and Samādhi leading to Mokṣa
हरिं संस्थाप्य देहाब्जे ध्यायन्यो गी च भक्तिभाक् / आत्मानमात्मना केचित्पश्यन्ति ध्यानचक्षुषः
hariṃ saṃsthāpya dehābje dhyāyanyo gī ca bhaktibhāk / ātmānamātmanā kecitpaśyanti dhyānacakṣuṣaḥ
Itinatatag si Hari sa lotus ng katawan (sa puso), ang yogin na may bhakti ay nagmumuni. At may ilan na, sa mata ng pagninilay, nasisilayan ang Sarili (Ātman) sa pamamagitan ng Sarili rin.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Bhakti-yukta yoga: installing Hari in the heart and meditating leads to inner vision where ātman is realized by ātman.
Vedantic Theme: Antaryāmin (inner ruler) and ātma-jñāna; bhakti as a purifier that ripens into direct realization (aparokṣa-anubhava).
Application: Practice īṣṭa-devatā dhyāna: visualize Hari seated in the heart-lotus; combine nāma-smaraṇa with silent witnessing until ‘dhyāna-cakṣuḥ’ (inner clarity) arises.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: inner sacred locus (hṛdaya-puṇḍarīka)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.235.43 (praṇava-dhyāna); Garuda Purana 1.235.45-47 (jñāna/yoga; ekacittatā; liberated yogin)
This verse presents inner installation of Hari (Viṣṇu) in the dehābja (heart-lotus) as a direct meditative method where devotion and yoga combine, leading toward Self-realization and liberation-oriented insight.
It points to a liberating path: through bhakti-filled meditation, one gains dhyāna-cakṣu (contemplative vision) and realizes the Ātman—an insight that transcends fear of post-death states by rooting awareness in the Self.
Practice daily heart-centered meditation on Viṣṇu/Hari with devotion, cultivating steady attention (dhyāna) and ethical living; the aim is inner clarity—seeing the Self through the Self rather than being driven by anxiety about death or afterlife.